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IN THE
NEWS
4Wave mixes
with contract manufacturer
By
Stephen Hardy Lightwave editorial director and
associate publisher
Lightwave,
Page 23, December, 2006 After 6
years as a supplier of manufacturing equipment for
hard disk drive heads, 4Wave Inc.
(www.4waveinc.com) succumbed to the temptation to
use its expertise to make its own
components-specifically, optical components. The
move from hard disks to optics isn’t
unprecedented; for example, Iolon, which made
tunable lasers before Coherent picked up its
assets, leveraged technology originally developed
for disk drives in its design. Still, the
transition from memory to photonics isn’t exactly
intuitive. Recognizing they needed help to
graduate from wafers to finished products, the
management at 4Wave looked for a manufacturing
partner that could also help with component
design. The result is a product that is nearly
ready for production.
Sami Antrazi,
president of 4Wave, says that his company
specialized in the development of manufacturing
equipment that leveraged ion-beam deposition. As
part of its R&D efforts, the company created a
process that would enable it to deposit thin
films, both magnetic and optical, with great
efficiency. The optical capabilities showed
promise for multiplexer/demultiplexer designs.
“With our technology and our equipment
that we built, we’re able put down four discrete
optical filters right next to each other on one
piece of glass, and then you put a mirror on the
back side. So that gives you a small bounce
cavity,” Antrazi explains.
The four-filter
design lent itself to 10GBase-LX4 applications, so
4Wave decided to develop a receive optical
subassembly (ROSA) for such transceivers with its
multiplexer/demultiplexer design at its heart.
However, 4Wave management faced an immediate
challenge, once it got past wafer design and
development. “We have no expertise in the
electronics behind the optics or how to put
something like this together,” Antrazi admits.
So 4Wave’s management began networking to
find a partner who did have this expertise. “We
find that the best way to find partners is to talk
to our vendors, because they’re in a lot of
companies. So we talked to a couple of vendors and
they gave us about three companies to reference,”
Antrazi recalls.
The company eventually
settled on Avo Photonics (www.avophotonics.com).
Antrazi says that he liked the fact that Avo could
provide design assistance as well as straight
manufacturing at a price 4Wave could afford, since
the company wasn’t using venture capital to create
the new product. “Also, they were small enough
that they were nimble-let’s put it that way,” he
adds. “They were able to react quickly and we’re
hoping that they will grow as we grow. So there is
a joint benefit for both of us, compared to a big
company that wants 10,000 units to be manufactured
by them in a month.”
“It was typical
because there were unique aspects of it,” says
Matt Vinson, Avo Photonics’ vice president of
business development, of the nascent relationship
with 4Wave. “Almost every one of our customers has
something different they want done and a different
way that they want to do it in.”
Like many
potential customers, Vinson explains, 4Wave came
to Avo with a concept and a fundamental
understanding of what its component could do and
how it could be the keystone to a next-generation
device-but the company needed help with designing
the package from both the optical and electronic
perspectives.
The two companies began
discussions in June 2005. They completed initial
design specifications by the end of that summer,
with the first prototypes rolling out of Avo’s
facility in January 2006.
The design
featured extensive use of off-the-shelf components
from suppliers that Avo uncovered. “We have a
number of component suppliers that we have worked
with over time, that understand our design
criteria very well, that we can interface with and
very quickly come up with solutions and that are
likewise flexible,” Vinson says. “We also have a
fairly extensive list of standard component
manufacturers, so that when we need to go off and
do a standard component, take something off the
shelf-which is almost always the most
cost-effective approach-we have a very broad
knowledge of what’s available in that area.”
Both Avo and 4Wave tested the prototypes
before the latter delivered them to customers. The
initial reaction to the products was positive-with
the usual caveats that the transceiver vendors
would like something cheaper and smaller. That led
4Wave and Avo to huddle again.
“Some of
the things we’re doing to make it smaller and more
cost-effective will require some upfront
configuration changes,” Vinson reveals.
“During the first iteration, we were also
looking at other component manufacturers that we
would provide for Avo to get the costs down,”
Antrazi adds.
The new design may involve
the use of customized components as well. “In this
next generation, we may look more to the custom or
exotic type of device since the volumes will be
higher and we’ll be looking to get the cost down
at the higher volumes,” Vinson explains. However,
off-the-shelf components will remain a major part
of the design.
Vinson and Antrazi expect
to have prototypes of the new design ready by the
end of this year. Both executives feel their
partnership has been a success so far; soon, the
market will have the ultimate verdict.
Company Contact: Trey
Middleton, VP Business
Development 703.787.9283x100 tmiddleton@4waveinc.com
Investor
Information: Sami Antrazi,
President 703.787.9283x108 santrazi@4waveinc.com |